Background
Methods
Design
Identifying relevant studies
Key concepts | Research strategy |
---|---|
Support for self-management | TI-AB-SU ((“self-management” OR “self management” OR “self care” OR “self-care” OR “self-help” OR “self help”) N2 (support or education)) OR “collaborative care” OR ((MM “self-management”) OR (MM “self care”) OR (MH “models, nursing”) OR (MH “self concept”) OR (MH “self-assessment”) OR (MH “self-examination”) OR (MH “self administration”) OR (MH “self-control”) OR (MH “self efficacy”))) |
AND | |
Nurse | TI-AB-SU ((nurs*) OR ((MM “nursing”) OR (MM “nursing care”) OR (MM “nurses”) OR (MM “nurses, community health”) OR (MM “family nurse practitioners”) OR (MM “nurse practitioners”) OR (MM “nurse specialists”) OR (MM “nurse clinicians”))) |
AND | |
Primary care | TI-AB-SU (((primary N2 care) OR “community care” OR “community health service*” OR “ambulatory care”)) OR (MM “primary health care”) OR (MM “primary care nursing”) OR (MM “primary nursing”)) |
Study selection
Charting the data and collating, summarizing, and reporting the results
Categories | Definitions | ||
---|---|---|---|
Clinical integration | Person-focused care | Biopsychosocial perspective | “The first feature, person-focused care, reflects a biopsychosocial perspective of health, as it acknowledges that health problems are not synonymous to biological terms, diagnoses or diseases […] It bridges the gap between medical and social problems as it acknowledges that diseases are simultaneously a medical, psychological and social problem.” (p. 4) |
Care based on personal preferences, needs and values | “Moreover, person-focused care is based on personal preferences, needs, and values (i.e., understanding the personal meaning of an illness).” (p. 4) “Professionals have to take proper account of the needs of individuals, so that services provided are matched to their needs. […] Emphasis should be placed on a person’s needs.” (p. 7) | ||
Co-creation of care process | “This also encloses the important aspect of the patient as a co-creator in the care process” (p. 7) | ||
Shared responsibility and common agreement | “[…] with shared responsibility between the professional and the person to find a common ground on clinical management” (p. 7) | ||
Person coordinating his/her own care | “Emphasis should be placed on a person’s needs, with people coordinating their own care whenever possible” (p. 7) |
Results
Descriptive characteristics of the included studies
Study name Country | Aim of the study | Design | Setting | SMS theoretical foundations | SMS mode of delivery | SMS frequency and duration | Targeted population | SMS strategies |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
To determine if a combined pharmacological and behavioral intervention improves both depression and pain in primary care patients with musculoskeletal pain and comorbid depression | Protocol [50] RCT [51] Qualitative study [48] longitudinal analysis [49] | 11 veteran affairs and university primary care clinics | Stepped-care protocol based on: Stanford SM program, Social Cognitive Theory, SCAMP conceptual model | Face-to-face and by phone | 12 weeks antidepressants (step 1), 6 × 30 min Pain SM sessions over 12 weeks, 2 additional contacts occurring at 8–10 months (medication and pain self-management adherence) | Primary care patients with comorbid musculoskeletal pain and depression (n = 250) Adult patients with musculoskeletal pain in the lower back, hip or knee and comorbid clinical depression The depression had to be of at least moderate severity, that is, a PHQ-9 score ≥ 10 and endorsement of depressed mood and/or anhedonia. Depression severity was assessed using SCL-20. Anxiety was assessed with GAD-7 | • Education on pain SM • Pain SM manual • Problem-solving therapy • Goal setting • Action-planning • Condition monitoring • Feedback • Behavior monitoring • Relaxation • Deep breathing • Positive thinking • Evaluating non-traditional treatments • Practical support to SM • Health behavior advice | |
To disseminate and implement an evidence-based collaborative care management model for patients with both depression and poorly controlled diabetes and/or cardiovascular disease across multiple, real-world diverse clinical practice sites | Before-after experimental study [43] Quantitative descriptive [41] Intervention development and implementation [42] | Multistates medical groups (18 care systems, 172 primary care clinics) Integrated systems | Chronic Care Model (collaborative care) and TEAMcare as base model | Face-to-face and by phone | Duration: 3–12 months Intensity: at least 1x/month Active management phase: weekly (1st month) and then frequency gradually extended to monthly to every 3 months | Active depression (PHQ-9 of at least 10) and 1 poorly controlled medical condition (diabetes or high blood pressure) | • Education • Problem solving • Goal setting • Behavioral activation • Support for treatment adherence • Motivational interviewing • Brief intervention for misuse of alcohol or other substances • Social support • Systematic case review • Condition monitoring | |
To explore the relationship between CHD and depression in a GP population and to develop nurse-led personalised care (PC) for patients with CHD and depression | Literature review [53] Intervention development [52] Qualitative descriptive [55] Pilot RCT [56] Pilot RCT protocol [54] UPBEAT-UK research program [57] | 17 general practices in South London | Practice nurse-delivered personalized care intervention Own SMS definition: “Enabling patients to take better care of themselves” [56] | Face-to-face and by phone | Weekly, 15 + min sessions Duration: 6 months. Frequency: depending on needs | Adults with symptomatic CHD (registered on GP CHD QOF register and reporting chest pain), reporting depression symptoms were eligible. HADS-20 (8 or more for depression), modified Rose Angina Questionnaire for CHD | • Education (provide information) • Problem solving • Goal setting • Action planning • Social support • Case review • Self-monitoring • Motivational interviewing • Cognitive behavioral therapy | |
1) To investigate prevalence and impact of depression in patients with diabetes enrolled in a health maintenance organization using a population-based investigation; and 2) To test the effectiveness of collaborative care interventions in improving the quality of care and outcomes of depression among patients with diabetes in primary care within a randomized controlled trial | Protocol [46] RCT [45] Qualitative descriptive [44] Secondary analysis [47] | 9 primary care clinics in Western Washington | Collaborative Care Model based on the IMPACT study | Face-to-face and by phone | Step 1: 0–12 weeks, follow-up twice a month, 30-60 min Step 2: 12–24 weeks, once or twice/month depending on good/bad outcomes, 30 min Step 3: 24–52 weeks, once or twice/month, depending on good/bad outcomes, 30 min | Adults with diabetes and depression (PHQ greater than or equal to 10, SCL-20 depression mean item of 1.1 or greater) or dysthymia | • Patient education and support • Problem-solving • Goal setting • Action planning • Behavioral activation • Monitoring of adherence and outcomes • Medication management support • Motivational approach • Counselling • Case review | |
To determine whether a primary care based, care management intervention for multiple conditions would improve medical outcomes and depression scores among patients with major depression and poorly controlled diabetes, coronary heart disease, or both | RCT and results [39] RCT results [38] RCT results [40] | 14 primary care clinics in Group Health Cooperative in Washington state | Elements from: collaborative care, the Chronic Care Model and treat-to-target strategies (timely pharmacotherapy adjustment to achieve treatment goals) SMS is defined self-care support [38] | Face-to-face and by phone | Structured visits every 2–3 weeks until targets reached, every 4 weeks afterward (maintenance) | Adults with diagnoses of diabetes, coronary heart disease, or both, and depression (PHQ-2 3 or greater; PHQ-9 10 or greater) | • Provision of self-care materials (self-help book, booklet, a video compact disk) • Problem solving treatment for primary care (PST-PC) • Goal setting • Behavioral activation • Medication adherence strategies • Condition monitoring • Motivational coaching • Support for self-care • Support for self-monitoring • Moral boosting • Case review • SMS materials | |
To evaluate the comparative effectiveness of a collaborative model of care for patients with type 2 diabetes and depressive symptoms in the Canadian primary care setting while also determining the value of screening for depression itself when compared with usual care delivered outside the trial setting | Protocol [65] Controlled pragmatic trial [66] Qualitative implementation evaluation [67] | 4 primary care networks in Alberta | Adaption of Collaborative Care Model from TEAMcare approach | Face-to-face and by phone | Follow-up 1-2x/month, over 12-month period | Adults with type 2 diabetes and under the care of a primary care network family physician, Score > = 10 on the PHQ-9, speak English and have adequate hearing to complete telephone interviews and be willing and able to provide written informed consent to participate | • Patient education • Problem-solving therapy • Action planning • Shared care plan • Behavioral activation • Treatment adherence monitoring • Motivational interviewing | |
To evaluate a whole-system primary care-based complex intervention, called CARE Plus, to improve quality of life in multimorbid patients living in areas of very high deprivation | Protocol and pilot testing [59] RCT [60] | 8 general practices in Glasgow | The CARE plus approach (holistic patient-centred care approach) and SMS | Face-to-face | 30–45 min consultations | Adults with multimorbidity (average of 5 CD) (including CD and CMD) Depression/anxiety were present for nearly 70% of participants | • Education with SMS materials (mindfulness-based stress management CDs, CBT-derived self-help booklet, written material) • Goal setting • Action planning • Motivational interviewing | |
To determine the effectiveness of collaborative care in reducing depression in primary care patients with diabetes or heart disease using practice nurses as case managers | RCT protocol [61] RCT [62] | 11 Australian general practices | Adaptation of IMPACT Collaborative Care Model, including stepped-care (psychotherapy or pharmacotherapy) | Face-to-face | 45 min session every 3 months for 1 year | Adults with comorbid depression (PHQ-9 5 or greater) and heart diseases/diabetes | • Education and educational SMS materials • Problem-solving • Goal setting • Action planning • Behavioral techniques • Health behavior advice | |
To investigate whether a pragmatic nurse-led stepped-care program is effective in reducing the incidence of major depressive disorders at 12-months follow-up in comparison to usual care among patients with type 2 diabetes and/or coronary heart disease and subthreshold depression (Step-Dep trial) | Cluster RCT protocol [64] Pragmatic cluster RCT [63] | 27 primary care centers | Stepped-care intervention based on van’t Veer-Tazelaar Model | Face-to-face and by phone | 4 steps of 3 months each | Adults with subthreshold depression (PHQ-9 six or greater) and NOT major depression according to DSM-IV measured with MINI and diabetes and/or heart diseases | • Provide information (step 1) • Guided self-help course (step 2) • Problem-solving treatment (max. 7 sessions during 12 weeks, step 3) • Motivational interviewing • Condition monitoring | |
To outline the intervention; to use the accounts of patients who experienced the intervention to characterize its main features; to use the accounts of primary care staff to understand how the intervention was incorporated into primary care; and to reflect on implications for meeting psychosocial needs of patients with COPD in UK general practice | Qualitative study [58] | 6 primary care practices | Collaborative care, Whole System Framework and cognitive-behavioural approaches Liaison health workers (LHW) are nurses added to the primary care clinics | Face-to-face, at-home or by phone | Not specified | Adults with COPD and common mental disorders and psychosocial problems (QOF diagnosis with at least 1 QOF diagnosis of depression, social isolation, and chronic or recent psychosocial stressors) | • Education and information (medication management, SMS materials) • Problem-solving • Goal setting • Psychosocial interventions • Cognitive behavioral therapy • Health behaviour advice • Social support • Relaxation techniques • Practical support |
Participants targeted by SMS
Theoretical foundations of the studies
Mode of delivery, frequency, duration and strategies of SMS
Components | SMS strategies |
---|---|
A1. Information about condition and/or its management | |
A3. Provision of/agreement on specific clinical action plans and/or rescue medication | |
A4. Regular clinical review | Evaluating non-traditional treatments [51] |
A5. Monitoring of condition with feedback | |
A6. Practical support with adherence – medication or behavioral | |
A7. Provision of equipment | |
A10. Training/rehearsal for everyday activities | Support for self-care [39] |
A11. Training/rehearsal for practical self-management activities | |
A12. Training/rehearsal for psychological strategies | Informal counselling [57] Positive thinking [51] Emotional management [51] Negotiation methods [39] Morale-boosting strategies [39] Mindfulness-based approaches [59] |
A13. Social support | |
A14. Lifestyle advice and support | Brief interventions for misuse of alcohol or other substances [42] |
Integrated and non-integrated SMS interventions for CD and CMD (Question 1)
Study Is the study integrated? | Biopsychosocial perspective | Care based on needs, preferences and values | Co-creation of the care process | Shared responsibility and common agreement on clinical management | Person who coordinates his/her care when possible |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
No | No | No | Yes | Yes | |
Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
No | No | No | Yes | Yes | |
Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | |
Yes | No | No | Yes | No | |
No | No | No | No | No | |
Langer study [58] Integrated | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |